I. NATURE OF THE CASE
Anthony Spilotro appeals from an order of the District Court restraining him as officer, director and sole stockholder of Gold Rush, Ltd., from selling, transferring, encumbering or otherwise disposing of any of the property of Gold Rush during the pendency of proceedings under a RICO 1 indictment. The restraining order, which also applies to Spilotro’s two RICO co-defendants and their agents and employees, рrovides that the defendants may engage in the lawful and ordinary course of retail business upon the posting of a $180,000 performance bond with full surety. We remand the cause for an evidentiary hearing.
II. BACKGROUND
On July 14, 1981, appellant Spilotro was named in a nine-count indictment alleging that he and three co-defendants conducted the affairs of Gold Rush, Ltd., a Nevada corporation doing business as a retail jewelry store in Las Vegas, through a pattern of racketeering activity in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), by dealing in stolen jewelry, committing wire fraud, and conspiring to do both.
Spilotro owns all the shares of the capital stock of Gold Rush. Count IX of the indictment charges that the interests of Spilotro and his co-defendants in Gold Rush are subject to forfeiture pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1963(a).
On the date of the indictment, the Distriсt Court granted the Government’s ex parte motion for an order restraining the defendants from disposing of any title to, assets of or interest in Gold Rush during the pendency of the criminal proceedings. The order provided that Gold Rush would be permitted to engage in the lawful and ordinary course of retail business at the *615 Gold Rush store upon depositing an approved performance bond. The сourt further ordered that a hearing be held on or before August 10, 1981 to review the Government’s motion for a restraining order and the establishment of a performance bond. The court appointed two appraisers to take an inventory of all the property of Gold Rush for purposes of establishing the amount of the performance bond, and ordered the defendants to make available for examination any property and documents requested by the appraisers.
The next day the District Court granted an ex parte motion of the Government requesting that the order of the previous day be amended to authorize the F.B.I. to utilize such force as was necessary to conduct the appraisal.
The appraisal was conducted on July 15. The aрpraisers estimated the retail value of the merchandise and fixtures at $600,000, the wholesale value at $300,000, and the liquidation value at $180,000. On July 24, the Government filed a motion requesting the court to set the amount of the performance bond at $600,000.
The defendant opposed the motion, and both parties were represented at a hearing on the matter held on August 17, 1981. Subsequent to the hearing, at which no evidence was introduced, the court, without entering formal findings of fact or conclusions of law, ordered that the performance bond be set at $180,000, the liquidation value of Gold Rush’s assets.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction
Although interlocutory appeals are generally not permitted, there is a small class of cases “which finally determine claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.”
Cohen v. Beneficial Loan Corp.,
While the restraining order here is not entirely separable from the RICO proceedings, in the sense that those proceedings will finally adjudicate the question of whether the defendants’ “interest” in the enterprise is subject to forfeiture, it is separable in the sense that the question of whether the statute and the Constitution permit such an order of such scope at this stage of the proceedings will not be answered by the disposition of the pending criminal trial. Nor will the ultimate outcome of the criminal proceedings determine what kind of evidentiary burden the Government must meеt before a pretrial restraining order may be granted. Further, the right to continue to operate a business during the pendency of a trial unfettered by a performance bond which is allegedly prohibitively costly is too important to await the outcome of the criminal proceedings.
In
United States v. Crozier,
*616
Although Gold Rush did not seek to participate in the post-seizure hearing to permit continuation of the restraining order and filed no notice of appeal, it seeks to join Spilotro’s appeal as an “aggrieved party,” citing
United States v. Hubbard,
B. Jurisdiction to Enter the Restraining Order
Spilotro presses several alternative arguments in support of his contention that the District Court erred in entering a restraining order affecting the assets of Gold Rush. First, he focuses on the language of 18 U.S.C. § 1963(b), which grants the District Court jurisdiction to enter restraining orders and to set performance bonds, “in connection with any property or other interest subject to forfeiture under this section, as it shall deem proper.” Spilotro contеnds that property does not become “subject to forfeiture” until the defendant is convicted.
The legislative history of the Act does not support such a narrow reading. The House Report states that the purpose of § 1963(b) is to provide “for the entering of restraining orders and prohibitions and the requiring of performance bonds to prevent pre-conviction transfers of property to defeat the purposes of the new chapter.” H.R. Rep.No.91-1549, 91st Cong. 2d Sess. 57 reprinted in [1970] U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News, pp. 4007, 4033. (Emphasis added.) This purpose could obviously not be accomplished if restraining orders could only be entered after a defendant had been convicted.
Further, analysis of the language of paragraphs (b) and (c) of § 1963 indicates that the court is authorized to issue restraining orders prior to conviction. Paragraph (b) of § 1963 authorizes the issuance of a restraining order “in any action,” while paragraph'(e) authorizes the court to act only “upon conviction” of the defendant. It is clear that Congress intended to limit the District Court’s authority under paragraph (c) to a particular phase of the criminal proceeding; i.e., post-conviction. But no such limitation was рlaced on the District Court’s authority under paragraph (b); rather, the court is authorized to issue restraining orders “in any action” under § 1963. Thus, while paragraph (c) refers only to post-conviction procedures, paragraph (b) authorizes the court to issue restraining orders both prior to and after conviction.
We conclude that § 1963(b) grants District Courts jurisdiction to enter restraining orders and to require performance bonds in connection with property which will be subject to forfeiture if the defendant is convicted.
C. Adequacy of the Hearing
Spilotro next suggests that his due process rights were violated both because he was not given notice or a hearing before the initial ex parte issuance of the restraining order and because the Government made an inadequate factual showing at the subsequent hearing to permit the District Court to continue the restraining order. RICO does not itself establish a specific procedure to be followed by the District Courts in *617 issuing restraining orders or setting performance bonds. Thus we confront the question of what procedural safeguards due process demands when a RICO defendant is restrained from disposing of his property during the pendency of a criminаl proceeding.
The initial ex parte restraining order here clearly affected Spilotro’s property and liberty interests in that it flatly prevented him from disposing of his property or engaging in his business at the Gold Rush store. Because the order deprived Spilotro of his interest in “continued possession and use of the goods,” due process protections apply.
Fuentes v. Shevin,
Nonetheless, pre-deprivation hearings may be dispensed with in certain “extraordinary circumstances.”
Fuentes v. Shevin,
Due process does demand, however, an “opportunity to be heard ‘at a meaningful timе and in a meaningful manner.’
Armstrong v. Manzo,
The Government may not wait until trial to рroduce adequate grounds for forfeiture.
United States v. Crozier,
Spilotro next contends that his due process rights were violated because the Government made an inadequate evidentia-ry showing at the postseizure hearing to permit continuation of the restraining order. Spilotro relies upon
United States v.
*618
Mandel,
The Mandel court held that to meet the first requirement, the Government must show that “it is likely to convince a jury ■ beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants are in fact guilty of the crimes charged.” Id. at 683. The court found, however, that a judicial finding that the Government had met this burden would bе inconsistent with the defendant’s presumption of innocence, and would render a fair trial less likely.
In considering this same argument in the context of a pretrial restraining order under the Continuing Criminal Enterprise statute, the court in
United States v. Long,
We hold that the Government’s burden in obtaining a restraining order in a RICO prosecution is similar to that in a continuing criminal enterprise prosecution:
Before a court can issue such a restraining order . . . the government must demonstrate that it is likely to convince a jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, of two things: one, that the defendant is guilty of violating the Continuing Criminal Enterprise statute and two, that the . . . properties at issue are subject to forfeiture under the provisions of [the statute]. [Citations]. In addition, these determinations must be made on the basis of a full hearing; the government cannot rely on indictments alonе.
United States v. Long,
The Government failed to meet its burden in this case. No evidence whatsoever was presented at the postseizure hearing. Aside from the indictment, the only indication of the strength of the Government’s case was the Government’s unsupported assertion in a prehearing motion that it intended to “utilize substantial amounts of physical evidence (including оver 1,000 pieces of stolen jewelry seized from Gold Rush) and electronically recorded conversations, making conviction likely.” Because none of this evidence was presented to the District Court, it was in no position to inde *619 pendently determine whether the Government’s assertion was merely an expression of prosecutorial optimism or whether the evidence was indеed probative, admissible, and likely to establish the defendants’ guilt.
D. Other Issues
Spilotro next contends that the restraining order here is improper insofar as it affects the assets of Gold Rush because RICO provides only for forfeiture of a defendant’s “interest” or property rights in an enterprise, not the assets of the enterprise or the enterprise itself. Spilotro further contends that the restraining order here is improperly directed at the Gold Rush corporation, which is not a party to the proceedings. Spilotro also contends that his wife has a fifty percent community property interest in the Gold Rush stock, and that it was therefore error for the District Court to enter a restraining order affecting all of that stock. Next, Spilotro contends that the $180,000 performance bond was prohibitively high, that it was not based upon the appraisal of the merchandise at the Gold Rush store, and that the appraisal was in any event inaccurate and was obtained in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. Finally, he contends that the portion of the order requiring the defendants to “make available those documents and permit examination of that property requested by the appraiser(s) as necessary for the fulfillment of this order” violates his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
Because we remand this case for a full evidentiary hearing, we decline to decide these issues. If the Government fails to meet its evidentiary burden for the issuance of a restraining order, these issues will become moot. Otherwise, Spilotro will have the opportunity to present and support these claims.
The cause is remanded to the District Court for a full evidentiary hearing and adjudication of the issues presented. Such hearing shall be commenced and continued without unreasonable delay. Thereupon the District Court shall either reaffirm, modify or vacate the restraining order, all to be done in conformity with the foregoing opinion. 4
The panel retains appellаte jurisdiction of this cause numbered 81-5760 and its present records and files. Either party may appeal the ultimate order of the District Court on remand by an appropriate notice of appeal. Either party may supplement the record on appeal in cause No. 81-5760 by the paying of the Clerk’s required fee.
REMANDED.
Notes
. Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1.968.
. In a different context, we have allowed an aggrieved party to obtain relief by way of mandamus in this court after having unsuccessfully attempted to obtain relief in the District Court.
See United States v. Sherman,
. The defendant also argues that the prosecution must show some likelihood that thе property will be transferred if the restraining order is not issued. We need not decide whether any such showing is required in cases involving other types of property. Here the property consists of jewelry and similar items which may be readily concealed, removed, or disposed of through licit or illicit means. Such property by its very nature poses the threat that it will be disposed of prior tо trial. Accordingly, we find that in the case of property of the type here involved, the Government is not required to make any independent showing regarding transfer.
. The Federal Rules of Evidence “provide that they ‘apply generally to . . . criminal cases and
proceedings
Fed.R.Evid. 1101(b) (Emphasis added). Clearly then, unless an exception applies, this being a criminal proceeding, the Federal Rules of Evidence, including Fed.R. Evid. 802 (barring hearsay), applies to an adversary hearing for the purpose of continuing a restraining order under 18 U.S.C. § 848.”
United States v. Veon,
